Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Asia markets mixed as dealers await start of key trade talks

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HONG KONG (AFP) - Asian markets were mixed yesterday with investors moving cautiously as they sifted through conflictin­g reports about the outlook for upcoming China-us trade talks.

Global investors have been broadly upbeat in recent weeks that the meeting in Washington between top-level representa­tives would see at least some progress.

But with the much-anticipate­d gathering due to start within hours, Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post reported pre-meeting discussion­s had not made any progress on key areas such as forced technology transfers, and that the meet would be cut in half to just one day. That came after Wall Street’s three main indexes ended with healthy gains on reports that a pareddown deal was still possible, with Beijing boosting agricultur­al purchases and Washington delaying the imposition of new tariffs next week.

Tensions were already showing this week after the US unveiled restrictio­ns on 28 Chinese entities over human rights violations in Xinjiang and imposed visa restrictio­ns on some officials, while a report said the White House was considerin­g curtailing American investment in the country. For its part, sources were reported to have said China had narrowed the issues it was willing to discuss as it felt in a stronger position owing to Donald Trump facing an impeachmen­t inquiry at home and a weakening economy.

The SCMP report “reverses the trade optimism that was dominating overnight flow as investors were hoping that at minimum, some type of a deal could be forged”, said Stephen Innes, Asiapacifi­c market strategist at Axitrader.

“So instead of debating how encompassi­ng the deal might be, investors are now back to plucking petals from a flower guessing if there will be a deal at all.” On regional markets, Hong Kong edged up 0.1 percent while Tokyo finished 0.5 percent higher and Shanghai put on 0.8 percent. Manila was also higher. But Seoul shed 0.8 percent, Singapore eased 0.4 percent, Mumbai dropped 0.8 percent and Bangkok fell 0.5 percent. Sydney and Jakarta were flat. London opened 0.2 percent higher, Paris added 0.3 percent and Frankfurt was flat.

In foreign exchange markets, the dollar was lower against most other currencies after minutes from the Federal Reserve’s September policy meeting showed it was growing concerned about the impact of Trump’s trade war.

The central bank is expected to cut interest rates for a third time when the board meets again later this month. The minutes “revealed greater concerns over downside risk from slowing global growth and trade tensions with subdued inflation also seen as a reason to cut”, said Rodrigo Catril at National Australia Bank. But he pointed out that “a few officials saw the need to push back against market Fed rate cut expectatio­ns”.

Oil prices extended Wednesday’s losses following data showing a bigger-than-forecast pick-up in US inventorie­s that reinforced worries about the impact on demand from a global slowdown and trade frictions. The data reversed a rally of more than one percent in the commodity that came after Turkey launched an offensive against Kurdish militants in northern Syria. There was little major impact from the unrest in Ecuador that has hit the country’s production.

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